Maurice Amiel, M. Arch. (U.C. Berkeley) is retired professor of Environmental Design at the School of Design, University of Quebec at Montreal, where he was involved mainly in environment-behaviour teaching and applied research projects.
In order to promote environmental awareness, he has turned after retiring to documenting and writing about various physical and human agents contributing to a sense of self, place and sociability.
Foreword In his “Petite histoire de la photographie,” Walter Benjamin discusses the expressive and representational dimensions of photography... Read more →
The case of the five-legs beast the five legs beast That is not the title of a short story by Bashevis Singer, the well-known Yiddish writer and... Read more →
“At night, noise is a nuisance.” That, in plain English, is what in French becomes an opportunity for a phonetically humorous turn of phrase: La... Read more →
By degrees To go from the patio of a great classic pile to the rushing St Lawrence river, a transition by degrees is necessary to “ritualize”... Read more →
Are people, in any crowd, “together”? If the people in a crowd attend an event, or attend to a common action, and are not simply co-present, as... Read more →
Summertime living These days of climatic disorder isn’t as easy as the Gershwin song goes. For one thing, rehydrating bottles of water and places... Read more →
It is about moving July 1st is moving day for tenants throughout the city and, given a majority of renters, scenes like the one in the feature... Read more →
Basic environmental ingredients of the public market The basic environmental ingredients of a public market, as shown in the feature image, are the... Read more →
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